Wood Storks moved to threatened species list?

A wood stork attempts to swallow a large fish at Quail West Country Club during the Ace Group Classic golf tournament on Sept. 20, 2010. Michel Fortier/Staff

A Wood Stork takes flight from a pond Friday at Florida Gulf Coast University's campus where the shrinking water caused by the dry season consolidates food for the stork and other wading birds. Michel Fortier/Staff

A group of wood storks gather with other birds in the canal along Goodlette-Frank Road near Ohio Drive on Friday, Feb. 29, 2008, in Naples, Fla. David Albers/ Staff

A wood stork attempts to swallow a large fish at Quail West Country Club during the Ace Group Classic golf tournament on Sept. 20, 2010. Michel Fortier/Staff

EXTRA PHOTO After foraging for food in shallow waters,three Wood Storks, including a juvenile, left, rest along the banks of a canal on the north side of Immokalee Road in Naples Thursday. Wood Storks are making their annual return before nesting some time in December and January. Michel Fortier/Staff

Overhead of woodstorks nesting near the Corkscrew Swamp in Immokalee. Cary Edmondson/Staff

A Wood Stork takes flight from a pond Friday at Florida Gulf Coast University's campus where the shrinking water caused by the dry season consolidates food for the stork and other wading birds. Michel Fortier/Staff

A Wood Stork takes flight from a pond Friday at Florida Gulf Coast University's campus where the shrinking water caused by the dry season consolidates food for the stork and other wading birds. Michel Fortier/Staff

A Wood Stork takes flight from a pond Friday at Florida Gulf Coast University's campus where the shrinking water caused by the dry season consolidates food for the stork and other wading birds. Michel Fortier/Staff

A Wood Stork takes flight from a pond Friday at Florida Gulf Coast University's campus where the shrinking water caused by the dry season consolidates food for the stork and other wading birds. Michel Fortier/Staff

A Wood Stork takes flight from a pond Friday at Florida Gulf Coast University's campus where the shrinking water caused by the dry season consolidates food for the stork and other wading birds. Michel Fortier/Staff

After foraging for food in shallow waters, a juvenile wood stork stretches its wings to balance on top of a pine tree along Immokalee Road in Naples in 2006. Wood storks are making their annual return before nesting some time in December and January. Michel Fortier/Staff